Mrs. Kimberly M Favart, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 420 Robbins Rd, Rindge, NH 03461 Phone: 603-899-6496 Fax: 603-899-3014 |
Dianne Brown, RN Registered Nurse - Psych/Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7 La Chance Circle, Rindge, NH 03461 Phone: 603-899-2032 Fax: 603-899-2032 |
Mrs. Rose Marie Gautreaux Bochicchio, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 8 Bradford St, Rindge, NH 03461 Phone: 603-831-2027 Fax: 603-899-6485 |
News Archive
A single combination pill could reduce cardiovascular disease and stroke in Latin Americans by up to 21 percent at a cost of about $35 per quality adjusted life year gained, according to a study led by a University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health research team.
According to a new study, children who survive cancer are at a higher risk of cancer later in life or may die early of other cause. The study included almost 900 young cancer survivors treated at Sydney Children's Hospital, from 1972 to 1999, alongside new cancer cases and early deaths. The risk of cancer was five times higher in childhood cancer survivors, the results showed, compared with the overall NSW population, that these survivors were seven and a half times more likely to die early.
Some hospitals in Michigan seek to address the unique needs of senior patients, including the use of specially designed emergency rooms, while voters in Georgia consider new fees to help improve trauma units.
Dame Judi Dench, Sir Richard Branson, actress Julie Christies and Sting have added their support to an ex-drugs minister and three former chief constables in calling for the decriminalization of the possession of all drugs. These celebrities together with leading lawyers, academics, artists and politicians have signed an open letter to David Cameron to mark this week's 40th anniversary of the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act. The letter, published in a full-page advertisement in Thursday's Guardian, calls for a "swift and transparent" review of the effectiveness of current drugs policies.
In the future, if you want to improve your ability to manipulate numbers in your head, you might just plug yourself in. So say researchers who report in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on May 16 on studies of a harmless form of brain stimulation applied to an area known to be important for math ability.
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